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Urban Architecture & Design, General & Miscellaneous Transportation, Public Affairs & Policies, Urban Studies, Infrastructure Policies
Alleviating Urban Traffic Congestion by Richard Arnott β€” book cover

Alleviating Urban Traffic Congestion

by Richard Arnott, Tilmann Rave, Ronnie Schob
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Overview

In 2000, the average driver in US metropolitan areas endured 27 hours of traffic delays, a rise from 7 hours in 1980. In many other countries, traffic delays are considerably worse than in the United States, and in developing countries urban traffic congestion is increasing with alarming rapidity. For fifty years, economists have been advocating congestion pricing as the way to deal with urban traffic congestion; but today, even after some successes, congestion pricing is encountering considerable political resistance. The authors of Alleviating Urban Traffic Congestion advocate active consideration of more microscopic policies that attack the problem at the scale at which actual policy decisions are made. Microscopic models, rather than macroscopic models that are too simplified and too aggregated, they argue, will lead to the analysis of a wider and more creative range of policies, at least some of which should work well and be politically acceptable.After developing the themes of the book, the authors illustrate them by examining some areas of urban transport policy that have been neglected by the macroscopic approach. These include downtown parking policy, the encouragement of bicycling, the staggering of work hours by dominant employers, and the use by medium-sized cities of a "multimode" ticket that charges cars entering the city center a toll equal to the transit fare. The reorientation of urban transport analysis that they advocate will by no means eliminate traffic delays but should speed up the adoption of a richer, more flexible, and ultimately more effective set of policies to alleviate urban traffic congestion.

Synopsis

Argues that urban transport economists should be less preoccupied with congestion pricing as the way of alleviating urban traffic congestion and should devote more of their attention to the study of policies that operate at a more microscopic scale—the scale at which urban transport policy decisions are made.

About the Author, Richard Arnott

Richard Arnott is Distinguished Professor of Economics at the University of California, Riverside.

Tilmann Rave is Researcher at the Ifo Institute for Economic Research in Munich.

Ronnie Schöb is Professor of Economics at Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Germany.

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Book Details

Published
September 1, 2005
Publisher
MIT Press
Pages
256
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780262012195

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